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#8986385 06/30/14
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Any of you guys fooled with this cartridge much? Aside from the cost of new brass, what would prevent you from owning one? It seems that the Vanguard is reasonably priced.

For those of you who do own one (Vanguard or Mark V), what's your opinion of the cartridge?




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I want one of the new Vanguards, but I wish it was offered in SS. Other than that, I'm no help.


Originally Posted by ingwe
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No Weatherby, but I have shot a .24-06 quite a bit which is basically the .240 Weatherby without the belt and squiggly shoulder.

Great at longish ranges.....particularly for varmits. Like all .24 caliber rifles, it is limited as to usefulness on larger game, but with care will get the job done on deer/pronghorn/hogs quite well.


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I think I'd go 6 mm-06 (possibly AI) too, just because I already have the 280 AI and 6.5-06 AI and the bushing neck sizer die, plus a lot of brass that can be necked down. The belt on the Wby. doesn't bother me, but it doesn't add anything either, except for cost and more scarce brass.



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After running the 6-06 for a bit, I really find no advantage to it over the 25-06. I'll go back to 25-06 when the bbl pukes.

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I agree.....shot both the .24-06 and .25-06 quite a bit. The smaller 6mm gains nothing over the .25-06 and the .25 caliber rifles are so much more versital.


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The cost of the new brass is why I won't own another one.
I had a Mk.5 Wby for a number of years. Hunted it along side a couple of .25-06's. After I sold it, I eventually aquired a .25-284. In short, I quite agree that a .240 Wby gives one nothing over a .25-06 or a ,25-284.
The only thing that might offer advantage would be the fancy, high BC bullets for the 6. E

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Just curious, those who have owned rifles in .240 before, how is brass life?


Originally Posted by ingwe
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Buy a .338WM.

The .340 WBY is hype and expense with no appreciable added value in performance.

IMO, the only Weatherby calibers worth owning are the .257, the .300, and the ,375/378.

If I owned one of those, I'd sell it to buy a rifle with less flash, hype, powder capacity (for which you get greater recoil and little added performance down range) Roy saw a bunch of you folks coming.... IMO. YMMV...

But damn - that .257 is impressive..... smile


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240, not 340 you blind old man.............


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There are several of them at my local dealer for $519 and several others on the internet for $475 or so. With shipping and transfer fees they would come out about the same as the local dealer; maybe a few dollars less.

I've had a 243 for years but never one of the faster 6mms. No real need for it other than to fiddle with it and.....well......that's what rifle cranks do.

Any of you other guys fiddled with a 240 Wby and would care to share your experiences....likes and dislikes?

By the way, you can buy loaded ammo for the 240($37) for less than a box of brass. That seems to mitigate the relatively high cost of brass for loading.


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I shot deer and varmints for a while with a ballistically identical 6/284. Great on varmints, great on deer out to moderate range. Truly long range, ran out of steam. Went back to the 257WBY and have been a happy mule deer hunter ever since.

If I was going to buy a new Weatherby for deer, it would be a 257WBY for sure. Almost zero recoil, flat and hard hitting for a very long ways. Lots more ammo and components, too. In a pinch, you can make serviceable 257WBY ammo from 264 WinMag (the best of the non 257WBY brass) or the very common and easy to find cheap 7mm RemMag brass. Might have to neck turn the 7mm stuff, but you can make it work.

There is no other piece of brass that can be made into a 240WBY case. They are unique and odd and unto themselves.

Rick Jamison was liking one for California Blacktailed deer right when he retired, but that is about the only person I know who spoke very highly of the round. It has bounced back and forth from obsolesence all of its life for good reasons.


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I always thought that case would make a nice .40 cal if blown out with a long tapered shoulder, kinda like a big belted 22 Hornet and use 40 Whelan data or some such.-Muddy

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Originally Posted by safariman
There is no other piece of brass that can be made into a 240WBY case. They are unique and odd and unto themselves.


Not true. 25-06 can be made into .240 Wby with the right dies. Talk to Dirtfarmer�

John


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I had a Mark V with a 24 inch barrel so chambered for a number of years. About 20 years, I didn't shoot it much, and hunted with with for a couple of seasons, The rifle was fine, I liked it but I gotten a 7mm-08 shortly after this is about 1981 or so and well I did a lot of hunting with that one for some odd reason! I would not say no to one, but a 243 is plenty when you are fooling with 6mm!


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Judd,

It's been done. One the top-notch gunsmiths here in Helena, Dennis Erhardt, is a big fan of the .240 necked up to .40. He's built several, but can't remember what he calls it.

I had a .240 for a while, a Mark V Ultra Lightweight. Eileen used it more than I did, because the stock fit her so well. Very accurate, both with fsctory ammo and handloads. She used both 90-grain Nosler E-Tips and 100-grain Partitions and it worked great, but not a heck of a lot of advantage over either the .243 Winchester or .25-06.


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John, I figured somebody had, it is just a natural-Judd

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Mule Deer

I hear ya about the little advantage over the 243 but I never buy based on such things. For me it's just the experience and trying something new (to me) out. That's all.


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Originally Posted by KDK
I want one of the new Vanguards, but I wish it was offered in SS. Other than that, I'm no help.


this?


-JW
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